Something colossal existed far earlier than it should have.

For decades, astronomers believed the universe needed time to build its giants. Black holes were thought to begin small, growing gradually as stars formed and galaxies took shape. That timeline now looks less certain. New data from the James Webb Space Telescope has revealed an object so massive, so distant, that it appears to have formed astonishingly early in cosmic history.
The signal is faint but persistent. If confirmed, it suggests something enormous was already taking shape when the universe was still in its infancy. That possibility is forcing scientists to revisit long held models of how structure emerged after the Big Bang.



